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Mon, Nov 09 2009 

Published: July 03, 2009 07:20 am    print this story  

Forum: Smoke alarms prevent fatalities

BY NICK AGOSTINELLI

When all their other arguments for forcing consumers to buy fire sprinklers fail, sprinkler manufacturers and their allies turn to an emotional question, one intended to shame people into supporting mandatory sprinklers: "How much is a human life worth?"

If the goal is saving lives and not selling sprinklers, the question to answer is, "What's the best way to save the largest number of lives in the most cost-effective manner?" We already know the answer to that question: Working smoke alarms are the most practical, cost-effective method of preventing home fire fatalities.

A 2008 study by the National Fire Protection Association found "the chances of surviving a reported home fire when working smoke alarms are present are 99.45 percent."

That does not mean people don't die in home fires. Over the seven-year period ending in 2006, Michigan averaged 109 fatal residential fires a year in its 4.5 million residences.

Ninety-three percent of those fatal fires occurred in residences without working smoke alarms.

Those who want to force homeowners to install fire sprinklers say, "If those homes had both working smoke alarms and sprinklers even more lives would have been saved." Now the question is how many, and at what cost?

John Hopkins University found 75 percent of residential fire deaths could have been prevented by smoke alarms. The Home Fire Sprinkler Coalition says installing both smoke alarms and a fire sprinkler system reduces the risk of death in a home by fire by 82 percent, relative to having neither.

If smoke alarms can reduce residential fire deaths by 75 percent and if having both smoke alarms and a fire sprinkler system can reduce residential fire deaths by 82 percent over having neither, then mandatory fire sprinklers would only reduce deaths in homes with working smoke alarms by 7 percent.

Michigan averages 1.31 residential fire fatalities per 100,000 homes or 131 fatalities a year. Working smoke alarms could have saved 91 of those 131 lives. The benefit of mandated sprinklers could be the saving of an additional 8.5 lives. But at what cost?

During the seven-year period of 2000-2006, an average of 40,544 new homes were built each year in Michigan. At a $6,000 per-home average price for adding fire sprinklers to homes that already have smoke alarms, the price of housing in Michigan would rise $243,264,000 a year.

Taking away home buyers' choice of how to spend over $243 million of their money -- as the sprinkler mandate proposed for Michigan does -- means they lose the ability to use that money in other ways they have decided would better increase the quality of life for themselves and their families.

Mandatory sprinklers take away their choice to use that money for a newer, safer home, improved medical care, better insurance, a safer and more fuel-efficient car, education expenses, retirement accounts or charitable giving.

Every fire death is a tragedy. The solution to reducing these deaths isn't mandating expensive sprinkler systems. The solution is to make sure every home has working smoke alarms.

About the author: Nick Agostinelli of Agostinelli Builders Inc. is legislative chair of the Grand Traverse Home Builders Association

About the forum: The forum is a periodic column of opinion written by Record-Eagle readers in their areas of interest or expertise. Submissions of 500 words or less may be made by e-mailing letters@record-eagle.com. Please include biographical information and a photo.

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